Archive for May, 2016
Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
Martin Creed is profiled in The Guardian this week, as the artist prepares for his major exhibition at the Park Avenue Armory, and another at Hauser and Wirth Somerset. “I don’t throw anything away. One of the ideas of the show was to try to make work out of things that I have kept over the years,” he says.
“What you think you are creating or making is not necessarily what you’re really doing. It’s like body language – it’s for other people to say what you are expressing or doing. It’s not a matter of being in control, really, but more like recognizing that that’s the way you are.” (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
Google has developed an extreme hi-definition camera designed to archive and digitize images of renowned artworks around the globe. The camera’s gigapixel resolution is designed to explore art works’ surfaces in far more depth than the human eye, and is being taken around the globe to photograph important works. (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
The Telegraph notes the recent critical and market re-appreciation of the work of Jean Dubuffet, as a number of high-profile museum exhibitions and a moderately valued market see the artist gaining impressive exposure as of late. Of particular note is a recent show at Timothy Taylor Gallery, which expands on the artist’s legacy beyond easy historical touchstones. “It doesn’t have much to do with ‘art brut’,” Taylor says. (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
The Art Newspaper reports on the opening of The Palestinian Museum in the town of Birzeit, which has opened its doors without a collection to show. The space has had a long struggle to open, and is currently showing works at a satellite show in Beirut, while the main space consists currently of “only the beautiful building and gardens,” according to acting director Omar Al-Qattan. (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
A profile piece in the New Yorker this week focuses on artist Kader Attia, and his recent project at the Guggenheim, in which he recreated the M’zab hilltop fortress in the Algerian city of Ghardaïa from over 700 pounds of couscous. “Everyone knows that Braque and Picasso were strongly influenced by the tribal, primitive art of Africa,” he says. “This never happened in architecture. We don’t know the influence of traditional architecture on architects like Le Corbusier.” (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
Continuing their ongoing efforts against the BP sponsorship of British arts institutions, a group of protesters gate-crashed an exhibition at the British Museum this week focused on Egyptian artifacts. “BP’s sponsorship is a story of gaining favor with repressive regimes, extracting fossil fuels and driving the rising sea levels that will cause people to flee sinking cities in the future,” says protester Jess Worth. “That story is already unfolding in Egypt. Meanwhile, the British Museum peddles the myth that BP is generous and ethical when it displays the company’s logos.” (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
Artist Pyotr Pavlensky, held for setting the doors to Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation ablaze, has reportedly had his ribs broken by a guard at the prison where he is being kept. “Every breath gives me pain,” Pavlensky wrote in a letter. (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
MoMA PS1 has announced its selection of performers for its annual Warm-Up Concerts, with highlights this year including a show featuring Detroit techno and house mainstays Theo Parrish and DJ Stingray, and a set early in the summer by New York Hip-hop legend DJ Premier. (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
Sculptor Mark di Suvero is the subject of a thorough profile in the Paris Review this week, which explores his evolving aesthetic sensibility, and his realization of systemic relations between his works when shown together. “They had resonance between them,” he says of seeing a large selection of his works at the Storm King Sculpture Center. “Suddenly, there was this kind of family grouping.” (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
Christie’s is still facing over $23 million in lawsuits from damages to its storage facilities after Superstorm Sandy, the Art Newspaper reports. The lawsuits range from collectors seeking to recover damages to their works, to insurance companies seeking to reclaim their own funds from damages to clients’ works. (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016
The uptown studio of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, where the Whitney Museum was born, are set to open its doors to visitors next month. “We think this place is a treasure,” says Stephanie K. Meeks, president and chief executive of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, “and one that deserves more recognition for its history and more of an opportunity for the public to engage with it.” (more…)
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Wednesday, May 18th, 2016

Robert Longo, Bullet Hole in Window (Detail), All Images courtesy Galerie Thaddeus Ropac
Now through May 22nd, 2016, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac in Paris is hosting Luminous Discontent, an exhibition of new work by American artist Robert Longo. Spanning three floors of the gallery’s Marais exhibition space, Longo is presenting a series of large-scale charcoal drawings and sculpture, constructed by the artist specifically for this space. This new work follows from Longo’s production of large-scale monochromatic, photorealist compositions, engaging with historical and political themes in new ways. (more…)
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Tuesday, May 17th, 2016

Elmgreen & Dragset, Van Gogh’s Ear (2016), Courtesy of the artists and K11 Art Foundation, Galerie Perrotin, Galleria Massimo de Carlo and Victoria Miro Gallery Photo: Jason Wyche, Courtesy Public Art Fund, NY
This month, the Public Art Fund unveiled Van Gogh’s Ear, the organization’s ambitious collaboration with artist duo Elmgreen & Dragset. Presented to the public on a fittingly drizzly wet April morning (considering the sculpture’s subject matter), the completely drained pool recalls those of 1950’s Los Angeles. The impressive 354-inch high sculpture, designed and crafted by the duo in the form of an ear, makes explicit reference to Van Gogh, whose dismembered ear has been the subject of various speculations in art history, stands on the hectic corner of 5th avenue, showing off its intricately detailed aqua blue interior, stainless steel ladder, glowing lights and accompanying diving board. (more…)
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Monday, May 16th, 2016
The New York Times interviews Adam Lindemann after the past week’s auctions, where he sold the record-setting Jean-Michel Basquiat lot at Christie’s, and explores the collector’s perspectives on bidding and winning lots. “The question is, do you want to be the lead in a smaller movie,” he says, likening sales to acting, “or do you want to be in a film with Brad Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio? If you know that you can deliver, you do the smaller movie, where you’re the lead and the movie is about you.” (more…)
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Monday, May 16th, 2016
Collector Steve Tisch is the subject of a New York Times profile, as the movie producer and Loews stakeholder offers the paper a tour of the small-scale museum he built to show his collection. “The building is dramatic,” he says, “but it’s not pretentious and it’s not overwhelming. I’m not Charles Foster Kane, and this isn’t Xanadu. Nobody took away my sled.” (more…)
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Monday, May 16th, 2016
The New Yorker looks at the recent wave of major museum expansions and construction, and notes the trend towards decreasing space for physical art, while spaces for performance, film screenings and talks have expanded. The article notes Tate Modern director Frances Morris’s vision of the modern museum moving “from being a museum that people come to and look at, spend time in, to a museum that opens its doors to collaboration, conversation, and participation.” (more…)
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Monday, May 16th, 2016
Cheyenne Westphal, one of Sotheby’s top sellers and a “secret weapon” according to Harper’s Bazaar, will leave the auction house to chair Phillips. “We are delighted that Cheyenne has agreed to join Phillips,” says current chair and CEO Edward Dolman. (more…)
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Monday, May 16th, 2016
Daniel Buren has installed a massive striped work on the outer facade of Paris’s Fondation Luis Vuitton, using his signature style to emphasize Frank Gehry’s unique architecture. (more…)
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Monday, May 16th, 2016

Tom Sachs, Waiting Arbor (2014), via Art Observed
For the first time in the museum’s history, an artist other than Isamu Noguchi will present work for the Noguchi Museum, as Tom Sachs brings his Tea Ceremony installation to the museum for its 30th Anniversary. Sachs, who previously worked on other sprawling, conceptually-unified installation projects like Space Program 2.0: MARS, and Hello Kitty Nativity, here turns his interests towards chanoyu, the traditional Japanese tea ceremony. Complete with a tea house, tools, and a garden, the exhibit features all the pieces necessary for the ceremony, each time realized through Sachs’s unique formal perspective. Among the items incorporated within the installation include a bronze bonsai tree made by wielding together over 3,600 individual parts, a full koi pond complete with living orange and gray fish, wooden and metal gates, a full tea house, and many other structures made of everyday objects.

Tom Sachs, Pond Berm (2016), via Art Observed
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Sunday, May 15th, 2016

David Hammons, Untitled (2014), via Art Observed
When it was announced that Mnuchin Gallery would host an exhibition of artist David Hammons’s work this year, anticipation was understandably high. The reclusive artist’s work is rarely given this expansive stage for historical examination and the contextual impact of his work. Spread out across the gallery’s two-floor townhouse exhibition space, Five Decades examines just that, Hammons’s expansive and formally elusive career working at a unique juncture of the avant-garde. (more…)
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Saturday, May 14th, 2016

Jessi Reaves, Muscle Chair (Laying down to talk) (2016), via Art Observed
Artist Jessi Reaves takes Bridget Donahue Gallery into the summer months with her show of new work, transposing the styles and forms of high design into the framework of fine art, and examining the interplay of languages that results. Having opened in early April, the exhibition, comprised of vividly executed furniture, shelving and cabinets, “suitable for use,” as the press release states, sees Reaves pushing her chosen forms towards new territories, substituting hard angles and flat planes for loping, curving lines, or inverting the often concealed material elements of each form. (more…)
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Friday, May 13th, 2016
Online auction houses Paddle 8 and Auctionata are merging to form a single online auction company, the New York Times reports. “We will be able to pick up an object and sell it quicker than anyone else in the world,” says Auctionata exec Alexander Zacke. (more…)
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Friday, May 13th, 2016
The Modigliani Sells, via Art Observed
After a long week of sales that has seen both ups and downs for the two main auction houses, Christie’s has concluded its week with a consistently solid Impressionist and Modern sale, with 7 of the 54 lots at auction going unsold for a final tally of $141,532,000. The auction house saw its momentary stumbles over the course of the sale, with several pieces falling well below estimate, and a few high-profile lots going unsold. Even so, Christie’s managed to keep the bids moving, and keep works selling, a point that surely is not lost on those watching Sotheby’s occasionally disheartening sale earlier this week. (more…)
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Friday, May 13th, 2016
The Guardian reports on Yves Klein’s years working as a picture framer in London, and the formative influence this work had on his practice, particularly in his work with pure pigments, gesso and gold leaf. “To earn my living, I worked illegally for about a year in the Old Brompton Road frame shop of Robert Savage, a friend of my father,” Klein wrote of his time in the shop. “It was there, assisting in the preparation of size, colors, varnish, of gilt bases, that I became familiar with the material, with handling it ‘in bulk’.” (more…)
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